With the bad old days that spanned that period between October, 1929 through August, 1945 seen only in the rear view mirror, many Americans began to enjoy the high life that came with the booming post-war economy – a buying spree that wouldn’t slow until the mid Seventies. In the midst of so much plenty American magazines began to run articles about some of the folks who weren’t partaking in all the fun, and this article is a fine example – it is about the 2,000,000 white people who toiled in the fields of the San Joaquin Valley. Thirteen years later they would be outsourced by a labor pool willing to work for even less money.
… They get no unemployment insurance. They get no social security benefits. The law does not, in the main, protect them.
Click here to read about the horrendous living conditions of 1940s migrant workers…
Click here to read about the tremendous hardships that fell upon the fertile San Joaquin Valley in 1937…